Chinese Panda Sanctuary in Search for 'Panda Caretaker'

A giant panda eats bamboo at the Bifengxia Base of China Giant Panda Protection and Research Center on July 14, 2007 in Yaan of Sichuan Province, China.China Photos / Getty Images file

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

May 15, 2014 / 2:10 PM GMT / Updated May 15, 2014 / 4:03 PM GMT

BEIJING – Would you love nothing more than spending the next 365 days in the company of 200 pound furry black and white animals whose favorite food is bamboo?

If so, you may be in luck.

China’s Giant Panda Protection and Research Center in Ya’an, Sichuan province just announced a competition for a one-year job as a “Panda Caretaker.”

The lucky winner will spend a year learning how to prepare panda food like the legendary “panda bread,” help researchers take care of old and disabled pandas and participate in ongoing scientific research on giant pandas, including those still in the wild.

Other perks of the top job? A salary of $32,000, free room and board, and an SUV at your disposal. Eight runners-up will win a three-day trip to panda-watch at the reserve.

The ideal candidate should be at least 22 years old, in good physical condition and willing to do rigorous activity, according to the rules on China’s popular web portal, Sohu, which is sponsoring the competition,

Naturally, a deep love and some general knowledge of giant pandas is a must.

Feeders play with giant panda cubs before a ceremony at the China Wolong Giant Panda Protection and Research Centre on Feb. 10, 2007, in Wolong Nature Reserve of Sichuan Province, China.China Photos / Getty Imagesfile

“We want to let more and more people know about the giant panda and how its conservation and research work on a day-to-day basis,” Yang Hua, a competition director from Sohu told NBC News. “We also wanted more everyday people participating directly in the conservation and research process.”

Besides looking after pandas, the winner would be asked to help write articles about his or her experience at the reserve and snap photos of their cuddly charges.

Sohu compared the panda keeper job to the “Best Job in the World” campaign in Australia –calling it the "Chinese version of a caretaker of an island on the Great Barrier Reef.

This is not the first time that China has recruited “Pambassadors” to help raise awareness about endangered creatures -- In 2010 American Ashley Roberton flew to Chengdu and won a similar competition that allowed her to work closely with giant pandas.